The present invention relates to the field of computers and optics, and more particularly, to an optical pointing device.
The computer pointing device, more commonly called a computer mouse, has evolved from the older “ball mouse” to the modern “optical mouse”. The optical mouse incorporates a light source and optical elements with an image sensor that can view a surface across which the mouse is to be moved.
The image data is processed with a motion detection process, which translates changes in the images into motion, moving the display cursor accordingly. The optical mouse illuminates the image surface through a light guide, and a sensor sees the surface through a lens. A known optical assembly combines the light guide and lens into a single sub-unit, as shown in
This system necessitates the design and manufacture of two separate components, namely the footplate and secondly the optical assembly (lens with light guide). To successfully assemble these two distinct components, the footplate must incorporate additional features and tolerances specifically for aligning the optics.
The separate manufacture of the optical assembly and footplate results in several disadvantages, which include but are not limited to: (1) the separate assembly of two components is costly during manufacturing; (2) the complexity of the footplate design is increased to incorporate the optics; (3) the lens image circle must be increased to accommodate the optics to base registration tolerances; and (4) assembling two components always incurs a risk of error, reducing product quality.
According to a first aspect of the present invention, an optical computer pointing device is provided that overcomes the disadvantages of the prior art.
The optical pointing device, i.e. a computer mouse, includes an optical assembly, having a lens and light guide, that is formed integrally with a base or footplate. The optical assembly and the footplate are designed as a single, homogenous unit and are molded in a single operation. This device does not require assembly of separate components.
The present invention will now be described by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
As shown in
The optical mouse, like all other electronic devices, is susceptible to damage (in extreme cases, total failure) due to Electrostatic Discharges (ESD). ESD protection circuits are built into the sensor electronics but these offer protection only to that component and only up to a predefined threshold, for example 4 KV. To further increase the threshold of damage from say 4 KV (a modest discharge, induced by a person simply walking on carpet or wearing clothes containing nylon) to say 15 KV (a strong discharge, possible by wearing shoes with insulating soles on a day with low humidity), optical components in a traditional mouse are extended with a flange or ring structure. In the present invention, this feature is not required because the base integrates this function. This significantly improves a product's resistance to ESD events.
Improvements and modifications can be made to the above without departing from the scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04251537.9 | Mar 2004 | EP | regional |